#1 Landlord Community
⚖️ Eviction Laws
🔄 Compare Evictions
📚 State Laws
🔎 Search Laws
🏛️ Courthouse Finder
⏱️ Timeline Tool
📖 Glossary
📊 Scorecard
💰 Security Deposits
🏠 Back to Legal Resources Hub
🏠 Law-Buddy
🏠 Compare State Laws
🏠 Quick Eviction Data
🔎 Notice Calculator
🔎 Cost Estimator
🔎 Timeline Calculator
🔎 Eviction Readiness
💰 Full Landlord Tenant Laws
McMinn County
McMinn County · Tennessee

McMinn County Landlord-Tenant Law

Tennessee landlord guide — county ordinances, courthouse info & local rules

📍 County Seat: Athens
👥 Pop. 54,033
⚖️ General Sessions Court
❌ URLTA Does Not Apply
🏭 East TN / US-11 / Etowah / Athens / Manufacturing & Tennessee Wesleyan County

McMinn County Rental Market Overview

McMinn County occupies a position in the southeastern quadrant of East Tennessee, sitting along the US-11 corridor between Chattanooga and Knoxville in the broader ridge-and-valley region that defines the geology and connectivity of this part of the state. Athens, the county seat, is a city of approximately 14,000 that anchors the county’s government, healthcare, and institutional life, while Etowah — a smaller city in the county’s southern half — has its own distinct identity rooted in railroad history and manufacturing. With a 2020 population of 54,033, McMinn County falls below the URLTA threshold, and Tennessee common law governs all residential tenancies throughout the county.

McMinn County’s economy draws from manufacturing that has been present in the county for generations — particularly in the metals, automotive supply, and industrial sectors — as well as healthcare centered on Athens Regional Medical Center, county and municipal government, and Tennessee Wesleyan University, a small private liberal arts university in Athens that adds a modest academic-household demand to the rental market. The county’s position between Chattanooga and Knoxville on a major US highway corridor gives it reasonable logistics access and has helped sustain its manufacturing base. The rental market is working-class and institutionally anchored, with a smaller professional and academic component concentrated around Tennessee Wesleyan and the medical center.

📊 Quick Stats

County Seat Athens
Population 54,033 (2020)
Key Communities Athens, Etowah, Englewood, Niota
Court System General Sessions Court, Athens
URLTA Status ❌ Does Not Apply (pop. under 75,000)
Rent Control None (state preemption)
Just-Cause Eviction Not required statewide

⚡ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 14-Day Pay or Vacate (T.C.A. § 66-7-109)
Lease Violation Notice 30-Day Notice to Vacate
Filing Fee ~$75–$105
Court Type General Sessions Court
Answer Deadline Set by court at time of filing
Writ Enforcement McMinn County Sheriff
Self-Help Eviction ❌ Prohibited statewide

McMinn County Ordinances & Local Rules

Topic Rule / Notes
Rent Control None. T.C.A. § 66-35-102 prohibits local rent control statewide.
URLTA Coverage ❌ Does not apply. Population (54,033) is below the 75,000 threshold. Tennessee common law governs all residential landlord-tenant matters.
Security Deposit No statutory cap under common law. Best practice: return within 30 days of lease end with itemized written deductions.
Habitability Tennessee’s common law implied warranty of habitability applies countywide. Landlords must maintain units in livable condition and address documented repair requests within a reasonable timeframe.
Repair-and-Deduct Not available. Statutory repair-and-deduct rights under T.C.A. § 66-28-502 apply only in URLTA counties.
Self-Help Eviction Prohibited statewide. Lockouts, utility shutoffs, or removal of tenant belongings without a court order expose landlords to civil liability.
Retaliatory Eviction URLTA anti-retaliation provisions do not apply. Common law retaliation principles remain in effect.
Late Fees No statutory cap. Must be clearly specified in the written lease to be enforceable.
Tennessee Wesleyan / Academic Market Tennessee Wesleyan University (TWU) in Athens generates a modest off-campus rental demand. Faculty and staff with multi-year appointments are the most stable academic applicants. Students without independent income require parental co-signers with verified income. TWU’s enrollment is relatively small, so the student market is not dominant but does create seasonal application pressure at lease-up time each spring.

🏛️ Courthouse Finder

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Tennessee

💵 Cost Snapshot

💰 Eviction Costs: Tennessee
Filing Fee 130
Total Est. Range $175-$400
Service: — Writ: —

Tennessee State Law Framework

⚡ Quick Overview

14
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
14
Days Notice (Violation)
30-45
Avg Total Days
$130
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 14-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate
Notice Period 14 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes
Days to Hearing 6-14 days
Days to Writ 10 days
Total Estimated Timeline 30-45 days
Total Estimated Cost $175-$400
⚠️ Watch Out

Tennessee has a dual-track eviction system. The URLTA (§66-28-505) applies to counties with population over 75,000 (covering ~75% of the population including Nashville, Memphis, Knoxville, Chattanooga). Non-URLTA counties use §66-7-109. Notice periods are 14 days for both tracks for nonpayment. Tenants have a mandatory 5-day grace period (§66-28-201(d)). The 14-day notice cannot be sent until after the 5-day grace period expires. If the same nonpayment recurs within 6 months, landlord can issue a 7-day unconditional quit notice (§66-28-505(a)(2)(B)). Filing fees vary by county ($100-$200).

Underground Landlord

📝 Tennessee Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the General Sessions Court. Pay the filing fee (~$130).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Tennessee eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Tennessee attorney or local legal aid organization.
🐛 See an error on this page? Let us know
Underground Landlord Underground Landlord
🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Tennessee landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Tennessee — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Tennessee's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
Ready to File?

Generate Tennessee-Compliant Legal Documents

AI-generated, state-specific eviction notices, pay-or-quit letters, lease termination documents, and more — pre-filled with your tenant's information and built to Tennessee requirements.

Generate a Document → View AI Hub →

🔎 Notice Calculator

📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
Underground LandlordUnderground Landlord

🏙️ Local Market & Screening Tips

Key submarkets: Athens (county seat, primary rental concentration, TWU, medical center, manufacturing), Etowah (southern McMinn, railroad heritage city, manufacturing employment, smaller rental market), Englewood (small community, limited inventory), Niota (rural residential).

Most stable tenants: Athens Regional Medical Center clinical and administrative staff, county and municipal government employees, TWU faculty and professional staff, and direct-hire manufacturing employees with verified 12+ months tenure at established facilities. For TWU student applicants, require a parental co-signer with independently verified income. Confirm direct-hire vs. staffing agency status explicitly for all manufacturing applicants — the distinction is particularly important in a mid-size industrial market like McMinn County’s.

Athens, Etowah, and the Ridge-and-Valley Economy: Renting in McMinn County, Tennessee

McMinn County sits in the ridge-and-valley province of southeastern East Tennessee — a landscape of long, parallel ridges and fertile valleys that runs from the Virginia border southwest toward Alabama, shaped by the same geological forces that produced the Great Valley of East Tennessee and the mountain ranges that flank it. The county’s terrain is gentler than the mountains to its east but more varied than the Plateau counties to its west, and the valleys — particularly the Etowah valley and the broader basin where Athens sits — have supported agriculture, industry, and transportation for over two centuries.

Athens, the county seat, is a city of about 14,000 with a working downtown, a functioning courthouse square, Tennessee Wesleyan University on its north side, and Athens Regional Medical Center anchoring its healthcare employment. Etowah, fifteen miles to the south, is a city of about 3,500 with a history rooted in the railroad — it was developed as a company town by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad in the early twentieth century and still has the planned-grid character of that origin, along with a manufacturing employment base that has evolved as the railroad economy has declined. These two cities, connected by US-411, define the county’s rental market geography.

Manufacturing as the Economic Foundation

Manufacturing has been part of McMinn County’s economy since the industrial era, and it remains the largest private-sector employment category in the county today. The specific facilities change over generations — some industries that were dominant fifty years ago have contracted or closed, while newer operations in automotive supply, metals processing, and industrial manufacturing have established themselves — but the county’s workforce has maintained the manufacturing skills and culture that make it attractive to industrial employers looking for reliable production labor in a lower-cost East Tennessee setting.

For landlords in Athens and Etowah, manufacturing workers represent the largest single segment of the rental applicant pool and, when properly screened, a reliable tenant base. The key screening variable is the same one that appears throughout East Tennessee’s industrial economy: direct-hire versus staffing agency employment. Automotive supply chain operations, metals facilities, and other manufacturing employers in McMinn County use staffing agencies as a standard workforce management tool, and a meaningful portion of any large facility’s production floor may be agency-placed at any given time.

The income that agency-placed workers earn from a manufacturing assignment is real income, and it may be substantial during active assignment periods. The stability question is whether the assignment continues. Unlike a direct employee whose termination requires employer action and provides certain procedural protections, an agency worker’s assignment can end without notice when production volumes decline or when the facility changes its workforce mix. A worker who has been on continuous assignment at the same facility through the same agency for two years is more stable than one who started three months ago, but the fundamental structure of their employment remains different from direct hire.

The verification approach is to ask the question directly: “Are you employed directly by the company, or are you placed through a staffing agency?” Most applicants will answer honestly, and the answer shapes how you weight the income in your evaluation. Follow up with the name of the staffing agency, the length of the current assignment, and whether the facility has offered or indicated intent to offer direct employment. A manufacturing worker who is in the process of transitioning to direct hire — with an offer letter or documented intent — is a different situation than one with no direct employment in sight.

Tennessee Wesleyan University and the Academic Market

Tennessee Wesleyan University is a small private liberal arts university affiliated with the United Methodist Church, with an enrollment of approximately 1,200 to 1,500 students. Its campus on the north side of Athens adds a modest academic dimension to the county’s rental market — not large enough to create a distinct student housing district on the scale of a UT or Tennessee Tech, but real enough to generate demand from students, graduate students, faculty, and staff that a landlord with property near the campus should understand and plan for.

TWU faculty and professional staff with multi-year appointments are excellent rental applicants. Their income is institutional, their employment is professionally grounded, and their connection to the university represents a genuine community investment. Adjunct or visiting faculty with single-year or renewable appointments are less certain — their income is real during the appointment but their continuation depends on enrollment levels and institutional decisions outside their control.

Student tenants at TWU face the standard challenge of most undergraduate students: their income is typically insufficient to cover rent at reasonable income-to-rent ratios without parental support, and their financial aid disbursements follow academic-year schedules that do not align with monthly rent obligations. The standard approach is to require a parental or guardian co-signer — a creditworthy adult who is jointly and severally liable for the lease — and to verify the co-signer’s income independently as you would verify any primary applicant. TWU’s small enrollment means the student rental demand in Athens is manageable rather than dominant, and the presence of the university is a net positive for the broader rental market without creating the intense turnover pressure of a much larger student population.

Athens Regional Medical Center

Athens Regional Medical Center serves McMinn County and draws patients from adjacent Bradley, Polk, and Monroe counties as well. Its workforce — nurses, technicians, therapists, administrative staff, and support personnel — represents one of the most reliable rental applicant pools available in the county. Healthcare workers in rural critical access and community hospital settings have made a deliberate choice to practice in a smaller community, and that choice tends to reflect the kind of long-term community commitment that translates into lease stability. A registered nurse or respiratory therapist who has been at Athens Regional for two or more years has demonstrated that commitment in a way that is meaningful for a landlord’s risk assessment.

Etowah’s Distinct Character

Etowah deserves specific mention because it is genuinely a different market from Athens within the same county. The Louisville and Nashville Railroad developed Etowah in 1906 as a division point — a company town built to service the railroad’s operations on the Appalachian Mountain crossing — and the city still has the grid layout, the company housing heritage, and the working-class identity of that origin. The railroad’s role in the city diminished over the twentieth century, and manufacturing filled some of the gap, but Etowah has never fully transitioned to the broader service economy that has diversified Athens.

The rental market in Etowah is smaller and more concentrated in working-class housing than Athens. Manufacturing employment at facilities in and around Etowah is the primary income source for most rental applicants in the city. The same direct-hire verification principles apply, and the same income and credit standards should be maintained. Etowah’s smaller market means acquisition costs for rental property are lower than in Athens, and the tenant pool is narrower — a combination that rewards landlords who maintain their properties well and build relationships with the stable, long-term working families who are the most reliable segment of Etowah’s rental demand.

🗺️ Neighboring Counties
⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Tennessee attorney or contact the McMinn County General Sessions Court for guidance on specific matters. Last updated: March 2026.

Explore by State

ALAKAZARCACOCTDEDCFLGAHIIDILINIAKSKYLAMEMDMAMIMNMSMOMTNENVNHNJNMNYNCNDOHOKORPARISCSDTNTXUTVTVAWAWVWIWY

Click any state to explore resources